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Millicent Fawcett: Suffragist honoured with first statue of woman in Parliament Square

Monument to equal rights campaigner created by Turner Prize-winning artist Gillian Wearing

Joe Sommerlad
Tuesday 24 April 2018 17:13 BST
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Statue commemorating life of suffragist Millicent Fawcett unveiled in Parliament Square

Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1847-1929), leading light of the women’s suffrage movement, has been honoured today with the unveiling of a new statue in London’s Parliament Square.

The monument, created by Turner Prize-winning artist Gillian Wearing, is the first of a woman to be unveiled on the square and marks a century since MPs passed the Representation of the People Act, giving some women the right to vote for the first time.

Fawcett takes her place before the seat of government alongside George Canning, Robert Peel, Benjamin Disraeli, Edward Smith-Stanley, Henry John Temple, David Lloyd George, Winston Churchill, Abraham Lincoln, Jan Smuts, Nelson Mandela and Mahatma Gandhi.

Theresa May and Sadiq Khan attend the statue’s unveiling (Getty)

The suffragist, who stressed the need for moderation and debate in the campaign for equal rights and opposed the more provocative tactics of Emmeline Pankhurst, is holding a banner that reads, “Courage calls to courage everywhere”, a line from her speech following the death of activist Emily Davison, trampled by a horse at the Epsom Derby of 1913.

“I wanted the monument to be as inclusive as possible and to reflect that many women were involved in progressing the rights of equality, some of whom have never been publicly recognised,” Wearing said.

“It is important to realise the battle for equality didn’t come easily. It was a long, hard, arduous struggle. I can’t even comprehend how frustrating Millicent’s life must have been as she spent six decades campaigning getting women the right to vote.”

The campaign to recognise Fawcett was started by activist and journalist Caroline Criado-Perez, fresh from her successful campaign to see Jane Austen placed on the £10 note, who noticed that lack of monuments to women while out for a morning jog.

Speaking at the statue’s unveiling this morning, Prime Minister Theresa May said: “I would not be standing here today as prime minister, no female MPs would have taken their seats in parliament, none of us would have the rights we now enjoy, were it not for one truly great woman: Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett.”

The honoree was born in Aldeburgh, Suffolk, on 11 June 1847, the eighth of 10 children in a family of prosperous barley merchants.

Aged 12, she was sent away to attend boarding school in Blackheath, London, in the company of her sister Elizabeth, who would grow up to become Britain’s first female doctor.

It was here that Millicent heard a speech by the radical MP John Stuart Mill in 1866 that inspired her to become involved in politics and seek fair representation for all.

Millicent Fawcett (Rex)

She subsequently became secretary of the London Society for Women’s Suffrage and married Liberal MP Henry Fawcett. The couple had a daughter called Philippa.

In 1868, she joined the London Suffrage Committee and spoke at the first public pro-suffrage meeting to be held in London.

Fawcett speaking at the Suffragist Pilgrimage in Hyde Park, 1913 (PA)

Combining motherhood with caring for her husband – blinded in a shooting accident – and writing prodigiously, Millicent found time to participate in the founding of Newnham College, Cambridge, in 1875, believing that creating new opportunities for women to enter higher education was crucial to encouraging the next generation of suffragists.

Tragedy struck in 1884 when Henry died, an event that led Fawcett to temporarily withdraw from public life to care for Philippa and raise four of her orphaned cousins with the aid of her sister Agnes.

Continuing to write on a huge array of feminist causes, Fawcett was later elected president of the National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), a role in which she served between 1897 and 1919.

That organisation stressed that its membership consisted only of “law-abiding suffragists”, at odds with the more militant tactics of the Pankhurst’s Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU).

Fawcett explained her opposition to the WSPU in her 1912 book Women’s Suffrage: A Short History of a Great Movement:

“I could not support a revolutionary movement, especially as it was ruled autocratically, at first, by a small group of four persons, and latterly by one person only… In 1908, this despotism decreed that the policy of suffering violence, but using none, was to be abandoned. After that, I had no doubt whatever that what was right for me and the NUWSS was to keep strictly to our principle of supporting our movement only by argument, based on common sense and experience and not by personal violence or lawbreaking of any kind.”

Over the course of a long and distinguished career, Fawcett also lobbied for the criminalising of incest and of cruelty against children within the family, for the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Act, which punished prostitutes for passing venereal complaints on to their clients.

She was also dispatched to South Africa in July 1901 and entrusted with reporting back to the British government on the conditions endured by prisoners of war held in concentration camps during the Second Boer War.

Technician Chloe Hughes, Sadiq Khan, Caroline Criado-Perez, artist Gillian Wearing and Justine Simons, during a visit to AB Fine Art Foundry in east London to see the finishing touches being put to the artwork (PA)

Fawcett’s memorial in Parliament Square is only the latest honour to be bestowed on this extraordinary woman.

In her own lifetime, she was awarded an honorary degree by the University of St Andrews in 1899 and appointed a Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE) in the 1925 New Year Honours.

She died at her home in Gower Street, London, on 5 August 1929, her legacy assured.

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